tv CNN This Morning CNN December 16, 2022 5:00am-6:00am PST
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hot tub, why not? and of course, puppy-friendly. we don't like to say perfect, but it's pretty perfect. booking.com, booking.yeah. friday, good morning, everyone. december 16th. >> guess what hour the it is to answer your question. >> this is a little thing i say in the 6:00 hour. are we in the 8:00 hour yet? >> it's our version of are we there yet? >> are we there yet? we're going to catch you up on five things first on cnn this morning. so kyiv is where we start. surviving one of the most massive missile attacks by russia since the start of the invasion. 76 missiles fired into ukraine
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with the kremlin reportedly using strategic bombers for the first time, the water supply interrupted in all districts, kharkiv also bombarded. >> a sprawling winter storm is blasting the northeast and impacting millions. the nor'easter bringing at least a foot of snow from pennsylvania to new england and heavy rain in all the other areas. almost two and a half feet of snow slammed parts of minnesota and other parts of the upper midwest leaving thousands without power in these chilly temperatures. >> the mother of one of the victims in the idaho college murders says she's frustrated with the lack of information from police as they are coming through authorities there. the registrations of 22,000 white hyundai elantras which could spotted on video. still if you can believe it no suspects in the case. a satellite that surveys most of the earth's water is on
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its way to board a spacex falcon nine rocket. >> engine ignition and lift off. lift off. >> it lifted off from space force base in california just over an hour ago. the international surface water and ocean topography mission is designed to show how oceans influence climate change as well as how global warming impacts lakes, rivers and reservoirs. >> jane fonda announcing her cancer is in remission. it's good soon, the soon to be 85-year-old actress has been battling lymphoma since september. her oncologist said she could stop treatments. we begin with texas bracing for a surge of migrants, the surge is ahead of the lifts of title 42 next week.
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a trump era policy that allows authorities to turn away migrants on public health grounds. all this while it's reported of a record high in backlog cases. wait times for a hearing is four years. straight now to ed lavandera in el paso, texas. >> reporter: the number of people sleeping on the street. people have been released from different points. this is what they've been dealing with.
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they're talking to temperatures as we deal with the temperatures, processing overcapacity, this is a great concern last night we saw officials from the emergency management office trying to urge people to get into the shelters that still had available space last night but this is the scene that's unfolding out here on the streets this morning. >> you were on the other side of the border in mexico just yesterday. ed, tell us what you saw. >> reporter: you know, we saw long and orderly line of people still crossing the river waiting for border patrol to allow them in so they can get processed, but what really struck out to me in our reporting yesterday is how many people are still on the mexican side of the rio grand from el paso waiting to see what's going to happen. so the shelters over there that deal with -- that help mie grants are also to capacity. we went into one that had close to 100 people, almost 50% more
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than they would normally have and a lot of those people told us they're waiting to see what happens with title 42 next week. they don't want to cross now because they don't want to get deported but they are waiting to see what happens with title 42. so there are a lot of people on the other side of the border waiting to see what happens next week. >> ed, thank you very much. it was just 18 days ago when elon musk said we are in, quote, a battle for the future of civilization. free speech is lost even in america tyranny is all that lies ahead. that was before. but now twitter suspended the accounts of several journalists that cover him. he said they violated the site's rules one day after changing the policy on sharing live information. musk is now arguing that these reporters violated the doxxing policy, which was intended to prevent the sharing of private
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information of users like their addresses or phone numbers. even though these reporters didn't do that. yet musk stood behind his decision late last night. >> you dox you get suspended. end of story. and ban evasion. ing like trying to be clever about it. i posted a link to the real time information is obviously -- that is obviously simply trying to evade the meaning. that is -- there's no different than actually sharing real-time information. >> so why does all of this matter? >> since buying twitter musk has said that he stands for free speech and wants to expand it on the site. what he has said has been inconsistent with what he has done. back in november, musk said he would not ban the account that tracks the location of his private jet. this week he did. back in october >> back in october, he said no
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major content deep signatureses would happen before that council convened. and since announcing his purchase of twitter, elon musk has sold husis takeover as a beacon of free speech, including comments he made back in april. >> i think it's important for there to be an inclusive arena for free speech. yeah. twitter has become kind. the de facto town square. >> is someone allowed to say something you don't like? if that is the case, then you have free speech. >> that was in april. since then he has punished his critics and has taken the step
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of suspending journalists from the platform saying press freedom cannot be switched on and off. there are lots of things to clear up here. i think the most important is an accusation that he made. elon musk said, quote, they posted my exact realtime location. >> from what we can see, the other journalists who have been suspended as well did not post his precisely location. >> what did you do? >> this all goes back. i poked the billionaire. this all goes back to a few days ago where there's this account that tracks the location using publicly available information of his plane. and he kicked that off twitter. he changed the rules to make it against twitter's rules.
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last night around 7, 8 p.m., he was suspended from twitter. >> so tyou simply reported on twitter on elon musk. >> twitter is a private company. it can do whatever the hell it wants. when it kicked off donald trump back in january 2021, many people said trump has other platforms, twit are. the first amendment does not apply to twitter. but coming from the guy who is the free speech absolutist, who said he wants to be a beacon of free expression. >> you obviously have a unique position. the question is what levers are there to pull now. you heard what the german
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foreign minister said. what will big advertisers like an apple do? >> i think our colleague has been reporting this this morning also said that is something to watch. i any one thing that is really important to stress here is i have a platform, i'm on cnn with you guys now. we are in the privileged position as journalists that we're still going to be able to report and do our jobs. for a lot of independent freelance journalists around the world. i worry about the chilling effect that this might have on those reports are, particularly when up think that -- is he
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going to come and close you down? >> i'm fascinated. you said our colleague oliver darcy told you. >> i didn't see an e-mail until an hour or so after i got banned. i did get a message that said you are permanently suspended. >> i want to know what you think about that phone call last night with reports are. w reporters. is he just being a baby? >> he engaged with a live discussion on twitter last night. a lot of this many said if you really look at your rules here, we didn't break them. he came up with some kind of
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nonsense that you played a minute and dropped off the call. >> i e-mailed him for an interview. elon musk, where are you? camera one. elon musk, come on the show. >> i've been told it is a permanent suspense. he did a little poll. it looks like he might be backtracking a little bit. >> the first poll was rigged. poppy, to your earlier question, i do think this is me personally and some news organizations are reevaluating why do we rely so much on the service? >> thank you, donie. >> you always have a platform here. >> donie always joins us. >> the two top democrats in
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. welcome back. the top two democrats in congress have gone further than they've gone before in voicing their support for another run. they both resoundingly endorse biden for a presidential run in 2024, all while enjoying a meal at their favorite chinese restaurant. watch this. >> what are you going to have? >> dumplings. >> hot and sour soup on a cold day. >> you met at a meal like this in is1987. >> george miller, who is my landlord, he said there's a new person joining our group, nancy pelosi, the new congress member from san francisco. and before i met her she will
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become the first woman speaker. that's what he said. god's honest truth. >> what was interesting -- >> you didn't know the first time. >> i knew she would be a force. >> would you like appetizers? >> i'll have an order of shrimp dumplings and then some string beans. >> the two of you are on the phone constantly. >> i probably dial hers more man just about anyone in my family. >> i say this all the time. what do you call that phone? >> if he had a regular smart phone, we could reduce the number of conversations because i could just text him. >> how would you describe your relationship?
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you're called the power couple, the odd couple. >> we're close friends. it's almost like brother and sister a little bit. >> when you disagree, who wins? >> usually her. >> when we disagree, then we end the conversation and we know -- >> we had a pretty tough one a week ago. what was it about? >> i don't remember. it was shall we say candid. >> i want to talk about how the two of you navigated working with former president trump. zpl he famously nicknamed the two of you chuck and nancy. i think you knew that speaker pelosi got under his skin. there was a good cop, bad cop? >> this is an historic moment, the president of the united states.
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so i'm thinking how is he going to begin? is he going to quote the constitution? american history, poet, the bible? >> you know he won the popular vote. >> that's how he started. >> i said, mr. president, that's not true. >> everyone thought we planned it out. it was about the government shutdown the first time and nancy said something to him about he didn't understand -- about women. >> chuck was masterful. he was masterful. >> she set him up so i could go in for the kill. >> he was masterful. he's talking to him about the government shutdown and about immigrants and the rest. and he says "i take ownership" -- >> so, mr. president, will you
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own the shutdown? >> yes, i will. oh thank you very much. >> there are a series of moments that you saw firsthand. there's the clap, there's tearing up the speech and then there is the famous picture. it's the meeting in the cabinet room where you stood up. and confronted. looking back at those moments, what was going through your mind? >> he doesn't stand a chance. >> i told people nancy instinctively knew how to handle trump. for her first 35, 40 years of trump, she raised children and that's what helped her with trump because he ultimately was a trial. >> i'm so hungry right now.
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i want some dumplings. >> i thought we were just reacting to your piece. i'm sorry. >> no, we get her in the flesh. >> in 35 years, remarkably ne have never done a joint sitdown interview together. the shrimp dumplings were excellent. i will say -- look, the flip phone with chuck shum are is -- it's a classic. he has memorized the phone numbers, not just hers but every one of the democratic senators in his caucus. and, look, it will not surprise you that when you tease the interview you see they have both endorsed biden for president in 2024. they want him to run. as far as donald trump, as we know, the only republican who
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was announced, nancy pelosi said later in the interview do we really have to talk about him while we're eating? so it just you've never seen them sort of that relaxed before and, look, she's stepping down as speaker but i think they're still going to be talking four times a day. >> interesting. i don't even know my own phone number. >> give me a break. >> i don't. i have to look it up. jamie, you're my great. don't tell these guys. >> he tells us every day and we don't blame him because you're our favorite, too. >> no other report thought to bribe them with chinese. >> it's just the relationship, how they have and navigated. look at what's happening with kevin mccarthy and mitch mcconnell. there is been moments.
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remember had manchin said he came to that agreement. schumer had not told pelosi that was part of the dynamic of that. so there have been those moments. up seep how it works on the other hand with the gop is really fascinating. >> this just in, we are learning that new york college student missing is found alive. melissa, what's going on with that? what happened? >> reporter: just extraordinary news this friday morning. our producer here at cnn happened to be on the phone to his father who was explaining he wasn't sleeping, who want well, really very shaken on this the 17th day that they've been without news when he got a tex
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message. he's sin confirmed to us that he's spoken to him. we don't know more about what happened, where he went or how he left his family. and he due to fly back to husband family for the holidays. >> a misdiagnosis sending the daughter of jake tapper to the hospital fighting for her life. our own dr. sanjay gupta sat down to talk about it. >> youou really thought that ale mighght die. from paying your peoplee from anywhere to supportrting your talent everywhere, we use data driven insights to design hr solutions and services to help businesses of all size work smarter today. so, they can have more success tomorrow.
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>> have you ever been living in extreme pain before? >> that was the scariest thing i've ever seen. the life was just leaving her. i thought why is her skin so green and why are her hands and feet freezing? >> i mean, you really thought that alice might die. >> i absolutely don't like to think that she could have died but 100% i was starting to think. >> jennifer and my colleague, jake tapper, are 15-year-old alice's parents. they all wanted to share their story as a cautionary tale and to shed light on how something so common, so treatable, could go so terribly wrong. >> i started throwing up on a saturday morning and i got really sick. i was just not getting better so my parents took me to go into the hospital. >> most likely diagnosis at the
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time, stomach pains, possible food poisons, goastroenteritis. >> i said why don't you just give her a sonogram and she has open going on and the doctor said to me, "that data is not needed." >> data, evidence, and one more critical element, judgment. for example, pain in the right lower belly is considered one of the most common symptoms of at appendicitis, yet only half of the people were appendicitis has that pain. >> they ruled out appendicitis
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was a jump test. i was asked to jump and i was maybe abe to get one inch off the ground and they declared it was a viral infection. >> this doctor says misdiagnosis can occur in part because of diagnostic momentum. >> you anchor yourself on that particular diagnosis and it is possible in some instances that it is taking you away from the condition that the patient has. >> it was in part that diagnostic momentum that led to the doctor's missing the early signs of appendicitis in alice. every year roughly 25,000 children develop appendicitis and according to this study published in 2020, roughly 5% of the time, that's a thousand times a year, the story mirrors the story of what happened to alice tapper next. >> we went into the hospital and we just assumed the doctors knew
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what they were talking about. jan and i would say are you sure it's not attppendicitis because her people p pediatrician thinks it m y be. >> we went to the administrator, figure it out. and they took the call and they took action. but most people wouldn't have been able to do that but we recognized we have this privilege. >> we got an x-ray and it showed that i had something going on in
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my appendix. after i got a son son ogram. >> her appendix had already ruptured. an appendectomy couldn't even be done because her cavity was now filled with infected fluid. >> after they discharged me and sent me home, i went back to the hospital because i still wasn't feelin feeling better and i ended up getting my appendix out 12 weeks later in march. >> what was your life like during those 12 weeks? >> i had lost so much weight from being hospitalized that i was just struggling to eat and
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able to function. i had trouble going to school. i would get so tired, i'd make my mom pick me up early. >> months of her life lost, so much that much entirely preventable. >> and joining us now is jake tapper and dr. sanjay gupta. jake, i can't get over that line, "the data's not needed." >> yeah, yeah. well, i mean, i think that there is -- and the reason, look, we're very privileged. we were able to break through the hospital bureaucracy and change who was taking care of alice. the average family would not have been able to do that and the average family may have very well lost that child. and that's why we're coming forward, not to point fingers but to say to the medical community please, at least 5% if not up to 15% of the time,
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appendicitis is being misdiagnosed, especially among kids and, as san jay pointed ou, 50% of the time is not just focused on the right quadrant. so the medical community needs to rethink how they rule out appendicitis. please do not just say, no, this is viral, do not back into diagnoses -- i'm sorry, i'm a limb emotional watching that piece again. >> no, it's all right. >> the reason we're coming forward is because we don't want this to happen to anyone else and we wrrecognize most people w would not have been able to get the hospital administrator on the phone. >> how are you doing? >> we're good. al us is healthier than anyone in the family. she's taken up crew and seized her life in the best possible
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way. but, look, almost losing a child is a horrible thing and we almost lost her. >> i remember when we saw this tweet last march and you were at the children's hospital of philadelphia, we can show it finally, the hospital that was able to save alice. and i had no idea about any of this background, right, and so to think what you went through and, sanjay, alice writes "i still can't believe this happened to me, i don't want it to happen to anyone else." what can families, as jake said, that are not as privileged as them do to save their children? >> i mean, it's interesting. i went through all the medical records. there's hundreds of pages. even aside from jake funinally making the call have the administrator. they did all the right things. they were very clear about what they thought was going on with
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alice. parents are going to know their kids better than anyone. kids may describe their symptoms differently to the doctors. parents know what's going on with their children. what jake and jennifer were doing were making it clear that this is unusual. the kid may be more stoic in the hospital. the parents need to understand the doctors understand how serious this is and they did that. there's also this thing called diagnostic momentum and it something to be aware of. think of this as the group thing that happens in hospital, someone puts down the diagnosis, somebody else affirms it, affirmed, affirmed, interrupting diagnostic momentum is an important thing. understand that people are going down this hill and you have to interrupt that. jennifer said something as well during the interview, which is you can be a kind person and a nice person but it's not the
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time to polite in terms of what's going on with their child. you have to make it clear, you don't want to outsource the thinking to other people, you need to be in there and got involved, which the tappers did, and this diagnosis still occurred. interrupting that dyiniagnostic momentum. >> if i could go back in time, i would say instead of being polite and saying do you think we could get an x-ray or a cat scan or sonogram, instead of being polite, i would be deferential. if that x-ray happened monday,
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all of the pain of tuesday and wednesday would have been avoided. i think demanding something for your kid or for yourself is something that patients can do. >> because you're their voice in this. you're their voice in this. >> it horri's horrible that you through this but, jake, you're using it for good. i know you're a bit emotional. jake is not usually emotional, he's a bit stoic at times. i'm happy that you're bruningin life to it. >> the children's hospital of philadelphia is not where all the bad stuff happened. removed her append ix. chops, the greatest hospital. i just don't want to
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welcome back to cnn this morning. elon musk sold 22 million shares of tesla shares. the last time he got rid of that much was shortly after he bought twitter in early november. this has added to a steady decline in tesla share value, which has been unraveling. let's turn to harry enten for this morning's number. >> this morning's number is tesla stock price change since november 4, 2021, it is down
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62%. this morning's number is 62. from $410 at the peak now to just $158 per share. why has tesla's stock price fallen so much in there are a bunch of different reasons. there are overall market problems. the market is down altogether. production problems in china, and musk buying twitter, tesla is down 30% since then. let's look at musk individually. he is obviously the man who runs tesla and we can see here, take a look at the worth of the two richest men in the world right now, elon musk down to 161. look at where they were 13 months ago. they're basically at the same level, $170 billion. look at elon musk's worth, though. it was at $340 billion. it is now down to $161 billion.
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obviously i'd like 161 billion. we're talking about a nearly 200 billion loss in his net worth because tesla is down considerably. electric cars are only 2% of the market at this point. that's something we have to keep in mind talking about this. most people still have a gas car. >> for now. >> thank you for the number, harry. >> a world chef highlighting his spanish roots with husis family. he is here live in studio. (customer) hi? (burke) happy anniversary. (customer) for what? (burke) every year you're with us, you get fifty dollars toward your home deductible. it's a policy perk for being a farmers customer. you get fifty dollars toward your home deductible. (customer) do i have to do anything? (burke) nothing. (customer) nothing? (burke) nothing. (customer)nothi? (burke) nothing. (customer) hmm, that is really something.
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the eat fresh® refresh just won't stop! now, subway® is refreshing their catering with easy-order platters and lunchboxes perfect for any party. pool parties... tailgates... holiday parties... even retirement parties. man, i love parties. subway keeps refreshing and refreshing ♪ the renowned chef and humanitarian josé andres is returning to his roots as he embarks on his new journey, sampling the food that inspired him and jump started his passion for cooking. >> hello, people.
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i am jose andres. spain is the land where i was born and where my passion for cooking began. >> oh, yeah. >> spain lives deep in my soul and its food has made me who i am, a chef who loves to feed the world. >> when you hear the happiness of all the ingredients. >> it's true, i have more than 30 restaurants across the u.s., but i am also a humanitarian feeding millions of people around the world. >> we did 600 hot meals, a good day. >> i'm off to america three decades ago and i raised my family here, and now i'm taking my daughters carlotta, ines and sophia all around my beloved home country. i want them to see it all. >> so joining us now is the chef, restaurateur, humanitarian and founder of world central
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kitchen josé andres. we want to talk about your ukraine stuff because that's so special, but this is cool to see you and your daughters going on this culinary tour, what was it like? >> quite frankly for a dad to do this with his daughters is amazing. this is during the pandemic we were very much cooking at home, posting videos. i told them, hey, what if we do a show? they began thinking about it, they said yes, and here we did it. >> i got to hang out with you guys and your daughters last night. pretty amazing, you have a great family. i don't know who they take after, but they are a great family. >> their mother who you don't see there. the mother, but she was behind, making sure that everything run perfectly. we went to many places that they were familiar with, south of spain, where i am from, but we went to all the places they have never been before and probably those were the best moments
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because for them was discovering even more the country where their mother and their father came from. >> everything is a family affair with you. let's just be honest, when i saw you in ukraine you were feeding people there, but you were also shooting this series, you were going back and forth, at one point one of your kids -- was it your son? someone came with you to ukraine. >> my daughter, sophia, she came for a week. >> you were doing this as well. why is it important for you to do all of this at once? this is crazy, josé. >> actually, it was my daughter ines, when i go back home i'm going to be -- oh, my. i mean, you know, the show celebrates -- hopefully the pandemic is behind. this is more than a show about spain, it's a show about family. it's about coming together. friends. going through difficult times together. and it's a show about telling the world, come on, let's start
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traveling, let's start going to far away places. this show is about all of that and more. >> why do you think food is such a uniter? because that's actually what you've done, in your restaurants united people and through world central kitchen you unite people in the most dire circumstances. >> listen, not to get too deep, but food is so important to all of us that we welcome people we don't even know to our table as a sign of i'm going to care for you. you are welcome to my tribe. remember, the first gift we receive as a sign of love is when we come into the world and our moms bring us to the body and somebody is feeding us. that moment the connection of humans with food is in the dna forever. a french philosopher said tell me what you eat, i will tell you who you are. this is very much ingrained in who we are. we need to start having food more at the heart of the table,
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especially as we talk about food as politics and food as policy. >> you got $100 million from jeff bezos, who are you using it? >> we put some of that money into the beginning of ukraine but we've spent hundreds of millions in that operation. 100% of the donations are private, but the money of the investors i'm using it in things that i believe. food is going to be the answer. we need to make sure that countries around the world recognize food as a national security issue. we need to start having global food institute that we can start talking about real policy in america and around the world that makes sure that food is not a problem but we're actually -- food is the solution. we're seeing it right now in ukraine. we have a lot of countries in africa cannot find themselves, that's a conundrum, that's a problem. it's why those countries cannot feed themselves. you see, food is not given the importance it deserved. we need to start thinking about food at a higher level. food is national security. if we don't do that many more problems are going to be happening in the years to come.
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>> you were on the ground how soon after the russian invasion of ukraine. >> world central kitchen was on the border of poland day one. myself i was in miami i think i arrived to the border in poland day three. >> yeah, i interviewed you. >> very quickly we began going in, i went n i've been there, i don't know, 80, 90 plus days, i'm going back in january. just came back from kherson, kherson was liberated and we went in there 24 hours later with water and with food and we kept going back every day. that's what we've been doing. ukraine has food. ukraine is exporting food. you're going to say why you feed them? because they have a problem of logistics. >> we have to go. congratulations on your portrait at the national portrait gallery. >> i don't get a vote but if i did i would vote nobel peace prize for you. >> there you go. >> thanks for coming on. >> josé andres, family in spain debuts december 27th.
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dollar. here is anderson. >> no matter the amount, you can make a big difference in helping our heroes continue their life-changing work. right now through january 3rd your donations will be matched dollar for dollar up to a total of $50,000 for each of this year's honorees. cnn is proud to offer you this simple way to support each cause and celebrate all of these everyday people who are changing the world. you can donate from your laptop, your tablet for your phone, just go to cnnheroes.com. your donation in any amount will help them help others. thanks. >> and if you know someone great who deserves to be a cnn hero tell us about them. our nominations for 2023 are open. you can go to cnnheroes.com. thanks for joining us this morning and "cnn newsroom" starts right now. >> have a great weekend, everyone. good friday morning to you, i'm jim sciutto. a lot of news to cover this morning so let's get started
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